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Sustained by Love Through the Wars
Sustained by Love Through the Wars
Sustained by Love Through the Wars
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Sustained by Love Through the Wars

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I hate war. War kills. War maims. War orphans. And it leaves a deep scar not only on the land, but also in the hearts of those who are affected by the war. I am one of those who carry a deep emotional wound to this day, more than sixty years later.

During WWII under Japan, my father was imprisoned because he was a Christian minister, who refused to bow down to the picture of the Japanese emperor. My elder brother volunteered to join the Japanese military in the hope of having his father released from the prison. He left home as a vibrant 15-year-old boy and returned home as a worn-out, injured, 18-year-old man; he died a year later. He was my best friend. During the Korean War, North Koreans took my father away. He never returned.

Sustained by Love through the Wars is a story of love, sacrifice, faith and suffering all wrapped in one package. The heroine in the story is my mother. Mother prayed without ceasing. Through her unceasing prayers, she was able to walk through the dark tunnel of trials and tribulations and lead us onward with love and grace, and absolute faith in God.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 18, 2023
ISBN9781685627393
Sustained by Love Through the Wars
Author

Hi-Dong Chai

A native of Seoul, Korea, Hi-Dong Chai was educated in the United States. He received a PhD in electrical engineering. As an engineer, he worked nineteen years with IBM and fifteen years as a professor of electrical engineering at San Jose State University. He was recognized as a leading authority of magnetic actuator design. He published extensively in the field of magnetic aspects of electromechanical devices, including a book, Electromechanical Motion Devices, Prentice Hall. He is a holder and co-holder of fifty-two inventions that were either published in the IBM Invention Disclosure Bulletin or filed for U.S. patents. With all his professional accomplishments, he did not forget his life’s journey through Korea as the last son of a Christian minister. He did not forget his father in prison under Japan’s rule. He did not forget his fifteen-year-old brother, volunteering to join the Japanese military in the hope of having his father released from prison, coming home after World War II, and dying from his injury. He did not forget his father who was taken away by the communists during the Korean War, never to return. He did not forget his mother whose life had been shattered by the wars, but who led her last son with love and wisdom. After retiring in 2002, he decided to spend his remaining years sharing his life stories with the world. My Truest Hope was published in the August 2012 issue of Guideposts magazine. My Truest Hope won the award for Writers talk Challenge for Memoir by South Bay Branch of California Writers Club in February 2013. Also, Blossoms and Bayonets co-authored with Jana McBurney-Lin was e-published in October 2012, and the print version was published in 2013. Sustained by Love Through the Wars is a formally edited version of Shattered by the Wars, a self-published memoir published by Inspiring Voices of Guideposts magazine in 2013. Also in 2022, Austin Macauley Publisher in New York published his Poems: Story from my Heart.

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    Sustained by Love Through the Wars - Hi-Dong Chai

    About the Author

    image1

    A native of Seoul, Korea, Hi-Dong Chai was educated in the United States. He received a PhD in electrical engineering. As an engineer, he worked nineteen years with IBM and fifteen years as a professor of electrical engineering at San Jose State University. He was recognized as a leading authority of magnetic actuator design. He published extensively in the field of magnetic aspects of electromechanical devices, including a book, Electromechanical Motion Devices, Prentice Hall. He is a holder and co-holder of fifty-two inventions that were either published in the IBM Invention Disclosure Bulletin or filed for U.S. patents.

    With all his professional accomplishments, he did not forget his life’s journey through Korea as the last son of a Christian minister. He did not forget his father in prison under Japan’s rule. He did not forget his fifteen-year-old brother, volunteering to join the Japanese military in the hope of having his father released from prison, coming home after World War II, and dying from his injury. He did not forget his father who was taken away by the communists during the Korean War, never to return. He did not forget his mother whose life had been shattered by the wars, but who led her last son with love and wisdom.

    After retiring in 2002, he decided to spend his remaining years sharing his life stories with the world. My Truest Hope was published in the August 2012 issue of Guideposts magazine. My Truest Hope won the award for Writers talk Challenge for Memoir by South Bay Branch of California Writers Club in February 2013. Also, Blossoms and Bayonets co-authored with Jana McBurney-Lin was e-published in October 2012, and the print version was published in 2013.

    Sustained by Love Through the Wars is a formally edited version of Shattered by the Wars, a self-published memoir published by Inspiring Voices of Guideposts magazine in 2013.

    Also in 2022, Austin Macauley Publisher in New York published his Poems: Story from my Heart.

    Dedication

    This book is dedicated to my mother,

    the greatest human being that I have known.

    And to all mothers in the world whose love and sacrifice

    have been permanently etched in the hearts of men and women

    who were nurtured by them.

    Copyright Information ©

    Hi-Dong Chai 2023

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other non-commercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher.

    Any person who commits any unauthorized act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

    All of the events in this memoir are true to the best of the author’s memory. The views expressed in this memoir are solely those of the author.

    Ordering Information

    Quantity sales: Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the publisher at the address below.

    Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication data

    Chai, Hi-Dong

    Sustained by Love Through the Wars

    ISBN 9781685627386 (Paperback)

    ISBN 9781685627393 (ePub e-book)

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2023905686

    www.austinmacauley.com/us

    First Published 2023

    Austin Macauley Publishers LLC

    40 Wall Street 33rd Floor, Suite 3302

    New York, NY 10005

    USA

    mail-usa@austinmacauley.com

    +1 (646) 5125767

    Acknowledgment

    Phyllis, my wife, who corrected my English from start to end.

    David Rim, my nephew, who took the picture of my mother praying.

    Hi-Hyun, my sister.

    And many friends who encouraged me to publish the story.

    This is a compelling story of a young boy’s coming of age during a very troubled time in Korea. It is the story of a family of faith, courage, and determination. The overriding theme is of a mother’s love for her husband and children and her unswerving faith in God’s goodness. The events are told from the point of view of Hi-Dong, the youngest child in a family of ten. The struggles of keeping the family intact and facing the hazards and despair of a country at work with itself are faced with strength and a steadfast devotion to God. A good read and certain to be on the bestseller list soon!

    —Betsy Shoup, Santa Clara, California

    Life experienced and seen through the eyes of a Korean boy under Japan during WWII and during the Korean War. A compelling story. Must-read book for every American to appreciate how fortunate he is to live in America.

    —Pat Doran, Los Gatos, California

    "Sustained by Love Through the Wars is certainly a moving and involving story. It is also an eye-opening picture of what it must have been like to be displaced by war and intolerance. I find that I am continually amazed and fortunate that I am now a friend with a person who survived all that upheaval and mind-blowing trauma. What a story he has to tell… And surely, there is much that we can learn from it."

    —John Hawes, San Jose, California

    An easy-reading and fascinating true story of life in Korea during the Japanese occupation and the North Korean invasion. The author, a bright and curious young boy, is raised by his courageous mother, who endures heartache and sorrow but scrimps and saves in order to send her son off to America, the land of opportunity. How the family copes with the difficulties encountered held my interest to the end.

    —Bill Slocum, San Jose, California

    Date: October 1950

    Place: Police station, Seoul, Korea

    The captain said, sitting down and lighting a cigarette, You are all communists and liars. Your husband is a communist in a preacher’s garb. He is not kidnapped, but escaped to the north. You know where your communist son is, and you don’t tell us.

    OK, you brat, Captain said. Where’s your brother?

    I don’t know, Sir.

    I am getting sick of listening to your lies, he said. Where is your worthless communist brother?

    He really doesn’t know, Captain, Mother spoke behind me.

    Shut up. I didn’t ask you! Captain screamed. That does it.

    Officer Kim. Captain made eye contact with Officer Kim.

    I saw Officer Kim pulling out his revolver from the holster. I heard him cock the revolver. Then, he placed the barrel against my temple. It felt cold and hard.

    Where’s your brother? Captain asked.

    I don’t know, Sir. That was the only answer I knew.

    Where’s your brother? Captain asked me again.

    ‘Is there something that I can say that will make the captain stop asking the same question?’ I asked myself.

    The night before the UN soldiers entered Seoul, I said, Brother came home and took a few of his belongings and left us. He didn’t tell us where he was going.

    I didn’t ask you to explain, Captain yelled. Now, for the last time… Where’s your brother?

    I closed my eyes, ignoring his question. What’s the use of answering? He’s not going to believe me anyway.

    That does it. Captain sounded final. Detective Kim, go ahead.

    I heard the pulling of the trigger and the barrel of the revolver jerking on my temple. I imagined the bullet speeding through my head, making holes through my skull and flying out the other side, covered with blood and brain matter. But I felt nothing. I heard no blasting sound of the bullet. Instead, a dead silence.

    Then, I heard a voice, Oh my God… Mother’s voice. I heard someone falling. I turned. Mother was on the floor. Slouched. Staring at me with her sunken round eyes. The same eyes I saw when I had walked out of Father’s office with Detective Lee a week ago. Her bent arms reaching out toward me. Trembling. I rushed to her, knelt down, and put my arm around her shoulder. She stared at me with round eyes as if she was seeing a ghost.

    Preface

    I hate war. War kills. War maims. War widows. War orphans. According to Wikipedia, In World War II, sixty-two to seventy-eight million lost their lives—over two and half percent of the world population. In the Korean War, two and half million North and South Koreans were killed or wounded. In the Vietnam War, more than four million North and South Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians lost their lives. And war leaves a deep scar not only on the land that will take years to heal, but also in the hearts of those who are affected by the war. I am one of those who carry a deep emotional wound to this day, more than seventy years later.

    During my earlier years in Korea, I lost three loved ones through World War II and the Korean War. During World War II under Japan, my father was imprisoned by the Japanese police because he was a Christian minister who refused to bow down to the picture of the Japanese emperor. My elder brother, my best friend, volunteered to join the Japanese military in the hope of having his father released from the prison. He left home as a vibrant fifteen-year-old boy and returned home as a worn-out, injured eighteen-year-old man when the war ended in 1945. He died from his injury a year later. In 1950, the Korean War broke out. North Korean communists occupied Seoul for ninety days, where we lived. One day, two North Korean officers came to my house and took my father away. He never returned. Also, the day before the South Korean army returned to Seoul, my eldest brother, who had turned communist, disappeared. He also never returned.

    Not only did I lose my father and two brothers, but I also lost my beloved dog. One day during the Korean War, Mother said, We don’t have enough food, even for the family. We have to let Kwidong go. How could I say no to Mother when there was not enough food even for the family? I had to let my best friend go. The picture of Kwidong turning her head toward me as if to say, Goodbye, as she was led down the street by a dog warden still numbs my heart with pain and guilt.

    I wrote Sustained by Love Through the Wars with my heart that had yearned for peace and brotherhood through my growing years, in the hope that the readers would seek harmony at home and peace in the world. I picture a scene where people from diverse cultures hold hands across the vast continents and over the deep oceans, form a huge circle, look at each other with broad smiles, and sing a mighty song of brotherhood. I know it is a dream but wouldn’t it be wonderful if that day would come in our lifetime?

    Chapter 1

    My Birth

    I was born in Seoul, Korea, as the last member in a family of ten children, three of whom died before my birth. Mother was forty-two years old when she had me. In those days, because of the lack of proper nutrition and medical care, people aged early, and delivering a baby at the age of forty was a miracle, like a seventy-year-old woman of today having a baby. So, when Mother delivered beautiful twin daughters at the age of thirty-seven, she thought that her baby-delivering mission was finally over. She felt relieved and grateful. She thought that nature would free her from this painful task. The remaining years would be spent raising her children, watching them grow, marry, and raise their own families. She would visit them and spend the afternoons playing with her grandchildren.

    Then, at the age of forty-two, she woke up one morning and felt something moving inside her.

    Oh God, what’s happening? Mother shuddered. Another child at my age? Please, God, don’t let this be…

    Mother secretly visited an herbal doctor. The doctor put his three fingers on her wrist to check her pulse and other body signs; he put his hand on her stomach and closed his eyes to feel any movement inside her stomach. After a few minutes, the doctor opened his eyes with a broad smile. He pronounced to Mother that a new life was preparing to enter the world in seven months. Mother begged him for medicine that would cause miscarriage. But the doctor said, I’m not an infant killer. Disheartened, she went to see her younger sister, Little Aunt, with her problem. Little Aunt was more understanding and suggested that Mother try several herbs. Eagerly, Mother tried them, and none of them worked. Instead, they gave her a stomachache. She pounded her stomach with a wooden bat when nobody was around. It didn’t work. She jumped up and down on a hard surface while pounding her stomach, but the little one in her stomach seemed to enjoy her antics. With each passing day, her stomach grew bigger and rounder.

    What will the people in the church think when they find out I am pregnant? She thought. Women will gather in someone’s house, giggle, and make stories about their minister’s wife being so sexually active past the age of forty. Men will make jokes about having a virile forty-seven-year-old minister who doesn’t know when to stop. She was dismayed and distressed, but there was nothing she could do but wait for the fateful moment.

    On September 10, 1936, early in the morning, an infant boy rushed out of her womb with a mighty roar. His roaring shook the whole house, waking up everyone from sleep. The family members rushed to the room to see the baby. They marveled at his chubby arms and legs. They marveled—some worried—at his head because it was the biggest head (one with a thin neck) that they had ever seen. Father was grateful and relieved because his old wife survived the painful birth experience, especially after delivering a baby with such a big head. He was also grateful because God gave him a son—not a daughter—who would carry on his family name. With the family members surrounding the mother and the baby, Father gave a prayer of thanksgiving and prayed that the baby would grow up happy, healthy, and responsible, trusting in God’s love.

    The news spread fast. The neighbors and the women in the church visited Mother to see her newborn son. They all marveled at his big head, chubby arms, and legs. His loud cry made them laugh. He will be a singer when he grows up, one said. Look at his legs and arms, another said. "He is going to be jangsar—Superman—who will look after his family and friends."

    But Mother was depressed for days, having another human being to take care of. She was also worried. His head is a little too big for his body. I wonder what he is going to turn out to be. Without consulting Father, who believed that fortune-telling was a sin, Mother invited a fortune-teller, an old woman with wrinkles all over her face, to find out what kind of future lay ahead for her son. After gazing at him for a while from top to bottom and checking the lifelines on his hands, the old woman told Mother that her son would bring good fortune to the family and be a shining star in the east. So, with the accolades from the visitors, encouraging remarks from the fortune-teller, and the innocent little baby eagerly seeking his mother’s milk, her worry and distress were gradually replaced by warmth and love toward him. She named him Hi-Dong, and he is the author of this story.

    My father was a Christian minister and educator whose life was totally dedicated to serving God and his flock. With his born-again experience and the newfound zeal for Christ, he traveled all over the Land of the Morning Calm, the land of the Buddhists and Confucians, preaching the gospel to those who thought Christianity was a white man’s religion. He traveled all over the countryside with American missionaries, preaching in village squares and building churches. He lived the life of St. Paul of old. He believed that his life’s mission was to introduce Christ’s message and lead as many Koreans to the bosom of Christ as he could. He wanted them to experience the deep inner peace and joy that he found when he had surrendered his life at the feet of Jesus, who died on the cross for people like him.

    He was rarely home with his family. When he was in town, he was either at the seminary where he taught young, aspiring seminarians, or visiting parishioners of his church, which had hundreds of members scattered around the city of Seoul. For him, his precious time belonged to Christ. In order to maximize his time for preaching, he slept little. He washed and shaved hurriedly with his sharp old-fashioned shaving knife, worrying me to no end that he might cut himself badly. He ate quickly. He took a spoonful of rice in his mouth, chewed six times, swallowed the rest, and went on to the next spoonful. As a child, I used to wonder, how come Father doesn’t get a stomachache eating so fast? Mother always tells me to chew every morsel in my mouth slowly until it becomes paste and then swallow. Otherwise, I will get a stomachache. But she never tells Father to slow down. Maybe she’s scared to tell him.

    When he finished the meal, he always said to Mother, "Yubo (honey in Korean), your cooking is delicious as always. Now I have to run. There is so much to do today. Take good care of yourself."

    Mother responded, Please have a blessed day. Please be sure to take a few minutes rest here and there.

    I never heard them say, I love you, because they—like others—felt that spoken words were cheap. They believed that love was such an important word that it should be expressed through deeds, not words. Father used to say that a bowl of rice given to a hungry man would soothe his hunger pain, while a thousand times saying I love you would keep his stomach empty.

    After saying goodbye to us, Father rushed out of the house. Then, late in the evening, he came home for supper and also to rest and recuperate for the next day’s activities. As a minister, he had no weekends off. Saturdays and Sundays were busier days for him because he had to prepare his sermons and lead the weekly worship services.

    Even though Father spent all his time and effort for the church and seminary, his pay was miniscule. In that period, there were no checks or credit cards, and the salary was paid in cash. So, each month, he brought a pack of paper money to Mother, and she had to figure out how to stretch it as far as possible.

    To supplement his small income, Mother sewed for people with her old treadle sewing machine. Ladies from the church and neighborhood brought dresses for altering and fabric for making new dresses.

    When I was a child, a lady visiting Mother with a pink spring outfit in her hands said, Myung-Hae was wearing this last spring. She looked very beautiful in it. But this year, it is too short for her because she has grown up so fast.

    I know, Mother replied.

    These days young girls grow like weeds! the lady said. So, instead of throwing it away, I decided to let her younger sister, Myung-Ja, wear it this year.

    Let me look at it, Mother said, taking the outfit from her and holding it up in front of her. This is a beautiful dress. It will be very good for your younger daughter. My memory tells me that Myung-Hae and Myung-Ja are about the same size except for the height. Myung-Hae is much taller.

    Yes, that is why I brought it to you.

    All I have to do is shorten the bottom somewhat.

    I think so.

    Can you tell me how much taller Myung-Hae is?

    She is taller than her sister by my index finger, the lady answered, sticking her index finger up in the air.

    Let me see your finger.

    The lady held her finger out toward Mother, and Mother compared it with her own and chuckled. We have the same size fingers. I will have the dress ready for you by tomorrow.

    Thank you, the lady said. How much will it be?

    This is such an easy job, Mother replied. You don’t have to pay me at all.

    But—

    Don’t worry about it. Just come tomorrow with your daughter. It will be ready.

    The next day, the lady came with Myung-Ja, and Mother put the dress on her. Myung-Ja shyly stood in front of them.

    You like it? Mother asked.

    Yes, Myung-Ja replied, smiling.

    You are blessed with two beautiful daughters, Mother complimented.

    Thank you, Myung-Ja’s mother said. They are my pearls.

    Myung-Ja’s mother insisted on paying for the service, but Mother refused. After repeated pleases and thank-yous and nos, they moved onto womanly talk on meandering topics while the daughter sat in one corner of the room, anxiously waiting to go home. After an hour or so, the lady asked for a glass of water. As soon as Mother stepped out of the room to get the water, the lady handed me an envelope, whispering to me to give it to Mother after they were gone.

    That was how the payment was transacted; I ended up being the middleman between the ladies and Mother. It was a fun task. Also, I found out who was generous and who was very tight with money. When I told these details to my twin sisters, they would make sharp comments about those ladies who did not pay much, and they would cast evil eyes when they saw them coming and would walk away from them, while whispering to each other and speaking of them as being stingy.

    Rarely a day passed without having visitors. In those days, no one had a telephone, and visitors came unannounced. They came in the morning. They came in the afternoon. They came just before mealtime and at night to stay over. Mother welcomed them all. For those who came just before a mealtime, she would make a quick adjustment to the food so that they could also be fed, though it meant that the children got less. Some visitors came and spent the night. The people from the countryside often came with live chickens, fish, potatoes, fruit, or whatever they could bring and stayed with us for days. Mother, whose love for people was in-born, treated all with such empathy that our house was like a village square. First-comers, usually men, came to see Father for advice or to discuss church-related matters. But when they found out what Mother was like, they sent their wives and children to see her with their personal problems.

    As a child, I found life to be exciting with all the visitors and the commotion that accompanied them. I did not, however, like those who came just before the mealtime because it meant that my portion of food would be less. Above all, the people loved me. They played with me. They brought sweets, and I enjoyed receiving them. I remember Mother saying with a smile to those who brought gifts, Your coming is itself an honor. Why do you have to bring a gift also?

    The visitors, in turn, replied, Please do not mention it. This is nothing at all.

    I said to myself, ’Don’t listen to Mother. You can bring as much as you wish, especially sweet things.’

    In those days, the gifts were mostly food items, and I snuck out to the kitchen with great anticipation to sample the foods that people brought. Most foods were homemade; as a result, each had a unique flavor, and I used to savor them.

    Mother was like the warm, pleasant sunshine. She had a way of helping people open themselves and share their innermost thoughts and problems. Many came with a look of despair, and after being with Mother, they left with a smile on their faces. She made them feel good. Sometimes, they poured out their problems with a voice of anguish and tears dripping down their cheeks. Mother listened with empathy and patience. By asking the right questions, she helped them to solve their own problems.

    Thus, with a wonderful mother and father, a lot of friends to play with, and an unending stream of visitors, who were sometimes a pain but who also brought gifts, excitement, and love, my childhood was a very happy one. I looked forward to every tomorrow.

    Chapter 2

    My Mother and Father—

    Their Early Years

    Mother told me that she was married early in her teens. In the early 1900s, Korea still carried on the feudal tradition of the Lee dynasty, the last dynasty before Japan annexed Korea in 1910, the dynasty that was heavily influenced by Confucius. Father was the king of the family, and the children were his subjects. Father ruled, and the children obeyed. Boys and girls had no voice in the selection of their mates. If a father said, Min-Ja, you marry Myung-Shin. That was the end of her daydreaming about what kind of man that she would want to marry. Myung-Shin could be a foot shorter and fifteen pounds lighter than Min-Ja. Myung-Shin could have a high

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